Google goes wireless, two new Azure services, Blackphone 2, Lenovo see's a market fallout due to SuperFish, a new model looks for internet security threats by scanning for bad language, FCC vote to reclassify internet service providers under Title II of the Federal communications act, HP buys Aruba and more!
If you're running OpenSSL you should patch now, China employs special units to wage cybewarfare, Target settles their security breach lawsuit for a measly 10 million dollars, the new MacBook's single port comes with a major security risk, Windows 10 upgrades for free, Enterprise Connect 2015 and the State of UC, and Nikhil Gupta joins us to talk about the challenges of storage in a virtual environment.
Comcast merger with Time Warner is dead in the water, Microsoft's Cloud March Continues, The Netherland's National High Tech Crime Unit snagged a large cache of keys, Pwnie Express has a solution for Stingrays, Dell goes after Cisco in the Data Center, Google goes "Google Fiber" on Wireless Carriers, Facebook and Twitter go after spammers and trolls, news from the RSA and more.
John Chambers of Cisco steps down, Healthcare data breaches from Cyber attacks, industry big boys are calling for Container standard, big Data and Autonomous vehicles, Intel Xeon E7v3, T-Mobile "Uncarrier" deals result in the company being unprofitable, Data Lakes vs. Data Warehouses, SAP Saphire NOW news, and Steve Gibson joins us to talk about Java Script-based DDOS.
Verizon acquires AOL, Hadoop is transitioning to mainstream use, Microsoft gets cloudy under the sea, cheap home routers are becoming a problem as they can be turned into botnets, business travelers get a privacy boost, Anonymous DDoS using an army of malware infected routers, and Steve Gibson joins us to talk about Venom and more.
Comcast apologizes for DNS outage, Chrome is zapping flash to save battery life, TSA missed 95% of test bombs, China blamed for massive breech at US Office of Personnel Management, things get worse for SOHO routers, Cheebert continues his Maui SmartNet installation, "Hacker's List" gets hacked, Google Loon crashing in a yard near you, Lisa Lorenzin joins the TWiET Riot to talk about mobile security and more.
T-Mobile wants to educate you about spectrum so you'll get mad at the FCC, Microsoft Office on Android phones, National Archive finds some remote control exploits, Casino's find big money in big data, Windows Insiders will get free Windows 10 (not really), and is it still better to put your financial information in the cloud?
Juniper makes peering faster, no speed limits for Fiber, solar powered planes, Cisco patches SSH vulnerability, the Supreme Court declines Google's request to overturn the copyright protection of Java's API, Puerto Rico says it can't pay back $70 billion dollars of debt, a wireless hotspot that has room for 10 SIM cards, and Steve Gibson joins us to talk about OSX and iOS security flaws, and Samsung's goozy of a vulnerability.
Windows 7 market share is up, Office 2016 is now available for Mac OS X, Verizon Wireless doesn't fulfill franchise agreement in NYC, Amazon CTO Werner showing off the Amazon API gateway, OPM Hack, Stanford starts the 'Secure Internet of Things', network failures from NYSE, United Airlines and WSJ, and then Chris Knowlton of Wowza joins us to talk about streaming in the enterprise.
Windows 10 is about to go Alpha, Senators ask the FCC to investigate cable and broadband prices, Apple's new patent for a service that would track the status of your bank accounts, Google wants Beacons to be open source, SPAM is at an all time low, Comcast's 2Gbps "bargain", a major breakthrough in fiber optic technology, Windows gets pushy with Windows Updates, and David and Cameron join us to talk about Kingston to talk about the adoption of PCIe and SSDs in the datacenter.
AC wireless for the win!, Windows 10 running on 1.5 million business PCs, hacking your significant other's pancreas, Century link takes $3 billion to build out rural broadband, Cisco is giving Apple an Enterprise Network Fast Lane, and a closer look at Nautilus Data Technologies and their barge data centers.
The Federal Trade Commission pressures communication device-makers for better security, Google releases Parsey McParseface as part of the open-source SyntaxNet, Azure Cloud expands into South Korea+Canada, Twitter disallows Dataminr from offering data to US intelligence agencies, Viptela announces their "vEdge-100" router, and more!
Google killing off Flash integration in Chrome, the Electronic Frontier Foundation asks the U.S. Army Court of Criminal Appeals to overturn Chelsea Manning's conviction, and a Estonia's Citizenship as a Service. Also, Lou Maresca takes over this episode and introduces guest TJ Laher, the product marketing manager of Cloudera.
IBM and Cisco collaborate in business analytics, EMC announces libStorage, Google's CEO expresses confidence in the company's AI assistant, a big security hole is found in a support tool on Lenovo computers, Augmented World Expo reveals some potential game-changers, and Ofer Gayer drops in to talk about Shotgun DDoS attacks, cyber-vandalism, and mitigation strategies.
Dan Goldin, formerly of NASA, announces his startup KnuEdge for neural networking, Omnitrail might become the future of proximity detection, Periscope tries out a "flash jury" feature to combat trolls, TeamViewer lacks knowledge on how their users were compromised, the FBI seeks legislation for browsing history inspection, and Timothy Titus of PathSolutions returns to talk about a big update!
The Ponemon Institute finds the average cost of a data breach, The Weather Company announces Deep Thunder, Microsoft buys Wand Labs and LinkedIn, Apple plans a new file system called Apple File System, Microsoft hopes to cash in on legal marijuana, Hewlett Packard teams up with GE, and John Curran discusses what's happening with IPv6.
New ISP privacy rules, fake takedown notices from piracy phishing scammers, APFS in MacOS Sierra, the Sunway TaihuLight is the fastest supercomputer in the world, Solar Roadways on Route 66, Google acquires Webpass, the TWiET gang goes on a shopping spree, and Yolonda Smith from Pwnie Express demonstrates Pwn Pulse.
A Windows 10 upgrade causes a travel agency to crash, Google's "Faster" trans-pacific fiber link goes live, Forrester Research shows robots won't steal everyone's jobs yet, drones continue to be a safety hazard during a fire, Hilary Clinton's leaked plan seems to support broadband for everyone by 2020, Boeing's got a fancy solar-powered plane that could replace some satellites, and Rekha Shenoy details the industrial security work that Belden provides.
The 2.4ghz 802.11g Linksys WRT54GL router continues to sell well 11 years later, the EU parliament moves on a slippery slope regarding online terrorist content, Enterprise Advantage is announced to come for MPSA, Lenovo investigates a vulnerability in their BIOS code, Oracle loses $3 billion to HP's claim, Josh Rykowski details the expansion of Augusta, GA as a Cyber hub, and more!
For the 200th episode, an all-star team discusses BYOD, SSDs, and other IT game changers from the past, present, and future. Fr. Robert Ballecer, Brian Chee, Curtis Franklin, and Lou Maresca celebrate with Tim Titus (of PathSolutions) and Cricket Liu (of Infoblox). Plus, David Leong and Cameron Crandall talk about Kingston's new data center products.
Microsoft's Back-door issues, Silk is acquired by Palantir, Deep Space Industries hopes to find water in asteroids, Comcast is told to stop advertising Xfinity as the fastest, ProjectSauron malware discovered on ~30 targets, AT&T is punished for cram scams, and Cricket Liu returns to talk about DNS DANE!
LinkedIn attacked by bots, TSA finds a 3D printed gun in luggage, Microsoft acquires Beam, Fuschia OS is Google's mysterious new creation, Seagate shows off a 60TB SSD, Amazon announces Kinesis Analytics, the Tenta browser encrypts everything, Zipline is heading to the United States, some great Blackhat clips, and more!
Rackspace goes private, WhatsApp shares phone numbers to Facebook, Windows 10 Anniversary Update breaks webcams, iOS update 9.3.5 is highly recommended to fix a security flaw, robot babies aren't successful in preventing teen pregnancy, Google shows distaste for intrusive ads on mobile sites, Walter Van Uytven speaks about Awingu, and more!
The startling odds of friending frauds on social media, Qualcomm's VR820 virtual reality headset, Surface 3's battery fix, Fujitsu's DRAM killer, Sony's Gold Plated Sony Walkman MW-WM1Z, the Flip Feng Shui modification to RowHammer, the AT&T Vice President's blog on Google's broadband investment, Waze's carpooling service, and an adaptive security conversation with Chris Pogue of Nuix.
Tom Wheeler of the FCC goes after set-top network operators, Dell owns RSA and EMC, Rob Fuller of R5 Industries opens locked Windows/Macs with a small device, Google acquires Apigee for $625 million, AT&T finds a way to not provide cheap internet to poor people, thousands of Wells Fargo employees get fired for fake accounts, and Jeff Hastings of BrightSign explains the convenience of his company's devices for digital signage.
The FCC has a new reverse auction, Nokia Bell Labs plans to present an impressive joint experiment, ClixSense's blunder, Google's Machine Learning strategy, L057 receives a ton of phone calls, Rob Fuller (Mubix) explains the USB exploit he has researched, and a VMWare rundown with Guido Appenzeller!
Yahoo admits to a two-year-old breach that affected 500 million users, Google may reveal a new WiFi router next month, Cisco finds a bad hardware flaw, Oracle announces an alliance with Salesforce, HP buys Samsung's printer division for $1.05 billion, Adblock Plus starts to sell ads, and more! Plus, Brandon Ross and Adam Walker from Network Utility Force talk about metro area wireless networks and installation.
A large iOS 10 exploit bounty, Blackberry exits the hardware business, China's 2 Gigawatt Solar Project, Facebook At Work announced for October 10th, Firefox loses trust in WoSign's certificate authority, the Electronic Frontier Foundation piles on HP for their DRM firmware, and more! Plus, Tim Hockin and Aparna Sinha discuss Kubernetes, Google, and containers.
Microsoft has added a new support policy that may be indefinite but reserves the right for Microsoft to drop the product at any time. The FCC has issued out what it would like for broadband privacy. If the rules pass users will have to opt-in for ISPs to share their user data. Verizon is firing anyone that repairs copper phone lines, and Georgia Tech is now the cheapest place to get a masters degree.
Terahertz radiation is proposed, OpenCAPI is announced, an Evernote bug causes data loss, IBM uses Cleversafe SecureSlice for cloud storage, GlobalSign screws up website certificates, the UK cabinet meetings ban Apple Watches, Backpage's CEO is arrested, Vitali Kremez talks about Flashpoint, and more!
Lou Maresca and Brian Chee discuss the October 21st DDoS attack on Dyn, Samsung's airport kiosks, AT&T's rumored bid for Time Warner, an exploding iPhone 7, the arrest of the LinkedIn password thief, Qualcomm's 5G vision, Yahoo's scary new patent, and more! Plus, Bruce Stewart joins to talk about physical access control and surveillance installation.
IBM's president stresses Watson's importance, several IRS phone scammers arrested, AWS strikes a helpful deal with VMware, Twitter announces they're cutting the Vine, Samsung's mobile division profits dip 96%, Al Franken and Mignon Clyburn tell Time readers how ISP companies restrict customer rights, AT&T and Time Warner plan to merge, and Bart Schacter from Iron.io describes Brexit's effects on IT.
Mirai Botnet almost takes Liberia completely offline, Android reaches an 88% marketshare, Brexit may involve a Parliament vote, Microsoft to roll out its Unified Update Platform, a hacker from Berlin causes a printer to intercept calls/texts, Android for Work demo peeks out from behind the curtain, and discussions on ultrasonic signal tracking and physical plant management/security.
Wayne Rash predicted the growing role of the Internet in getting people to vote, and we're having a conversation about how social media played a big part in the election. Who did it better: Trump, Hillary, or Bernie? BREXIT was the UK's potentially big mistake, is Trump ours?
More and more enterprises are adopting containers to adapt to changing IT needs, but storage management has been lagging behind traditional virtualization and cloud computing. PortWorx will be talking about how their product can quickly meet their expanding storage needs, and about the rapid changes in the container marketplace.
Graphical business intelligence with Esri and Microsoft BI showing how a picture is worth much more than a thousand words.
Retail analytics helps you find what your customers are looking at and for how long, and is a goldmine of information to help you tailor your displays to what your customers are truly interested in.
The new calendar year is upon us, and either we have a new budget, or we need to start thinking about using our budget...or losing it.
Join the hosts of TWiET in a look back at the highlights of 2016.
Ori Eisen, CEO of Trusona, will be talking about present and future directions for the SWIFT & CIAM for funds transfer standards. Where are security standards going and what are the driving forces?
The California Dept. of Insurance issued a news release on its investigation of the 2014 Anthem insurance cyber breach, stating a foreign nation was behind the breach, and the gang will be talking about "detect and respond" policies for the IT world.
We’ve been hearing a lot about the emergence of “DevSecOps,” or Rugged DevOps. How did this movement come about and in what ways do DevOps and security intersect?
A deep dive into the hyperconverged infrastructure market and VMware vSAN with a look at the 2017 VMWare roadmap.
Security Onion is a Linux distro for intrusion detection, network security monitoring, and log management.
We find out how we did on our 2016 predictions, and share our 2017 predictions.
Get past your manager's biggest objection to IoT: DevOps. Cayenne by MyDevices is a zero coding solution that very simply provides you with a way to bring sensor data into your enterprise.
ArcGIS 10.5, talking about Location Analytics with ArcGIS and how it's applied to the enterprise.
The Connected Health Initiative is a mobile Health Information Management System Society, which serves the health IT community
Faction, a Denver-based IaaS cloud provider, has received a patent for its hybrid and multi-cloud technology that allows service providers and enterprises to seamlessly connect the best features of various private and public clouds and design a robust cloud architecture that still operates as a single unified cloud.
SUSE Enterprise Linux w/ OpenStack by Petros Koutoupis of Linux Journal.
Ajit Pai is now firmly ensconced as chair of the FCC, what are the early indicators of what his chairmanship is going to do to or for consumers? Is this the end of Community Networks?
The US Congress may have decided that data privacy is not in the realm of responsibility, but the future of that privacy may not lay with them, but with the individual states. Also, the coming bot arms-race is upon us. It's only a matter of time before custom-made bots interact with other bots on a regular basis, and the best bots will give advantages to their owners. Beerud Sheth from Gupshup, the largest "bot to bot" communications company, guests to show us the future of microservices.
Android is tops on the Internet, but that DOESN'T mean Windows is out, somebody has declared war on the Internet of Things, the FCC is protecting the consumer by shedding its responsibilities to protect the consumer, and Gigamon makes real-time SSL decryption a possibility... AND a responsibility.
Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) is so much more than just remote access and VMWare Horizon is a solution to the secure remote access, provisioning, and management of both full virtual desktops and virtual applications so that you can run legacy and specialized applications regardless of your host operating system.
Ray Pompon, Principal Threat Researcher Evangelist, F5 Labs, will be participating and speaking to the topic of deceptive solutions and honeypots.
Everything the tech industry needs to know about data scientists - the industry’s hottest new job opportunity. How data teams can bridge the gap between CIOs & CMOs. The question becomes, is BigData changing and is Hadoop dead?
ExtraHop is a real-time streaming analytics platform to give you insight into what's really going on with your network, Google is fighting for our privacy rights in Edina, Minnesota, bad math in traffic light timing, and Intel fesses up to a security hole in their enterprise desktop CPUs.
Conversation about the Massive changes to the world of solid state storage with Kingston, Lou reports on the Build Conference, and Curt is talking about a breaking Ransomware wave in Europe.
Tim Titus, the CTO of PathSolutions, is talking about VoIP Problem solving and "Why Network troubleshooting is so difficult" and will demo how his tool "TotalView" looks at the entire path to solve these difficult issues.
Beyond credit scoring (new approaches to subscriber validation), the convergence of mobile data and finance, banking the unbanked. Padraig Stapleton of Argyle Data talks about analyzing terabytes of data in real time.
IoT has great potential, but when the stakes are higher, security has to be designed in, and Ron Culler talks about security for building management systems.
With the advent of Wave2 WiFi access points, plain old gigabit ethernet just isn't fast enough to keep up, well 802.3bz is coming to the rescue with 2.5gb/sec over plain old CAT5e cables you probably already have in your enterprise.
Kelly points out that much of the ‘surveillance society’ in which we live today had its origins in World War I espionage with the highly secretive British intelligence organization Room 40 and the decrypting of the Zimmerman telegram. And as we know, its contents of a proposed alliance between Germany and Mexico helped push the U.S. into entering the great war.
Jeff Sakowicz, on the Microsoft Graph API team within the Identity Developer Experience Group, talks about Microsoft Graph and how those API's and tool kits can be leveraged in your applications.
What kind of storage is appropriate for your on-premise or cloud storage needs? Ramesh Balan of Exablox is here to talk about the changing enterprise storage market.
MCoreLab is seeking to bring real time performance to big data analytics by leveraging an optimized cloud.
Solving the problem of incompatibility on Linux, macOS, and Windows by enterprise users and how Paragon Software Group's UFSD technology solves the cross-platform communication issues.
Regulation/compliance as impacting the need for secure browsing. How Ericom Shield provides a solution.
We can't always go to every trade show, but Brian McHenry of F5 will give us a view into the hot topics he found at BlackHat and tell us about what we missed.
We've almost forgotten VDI, but VMWare's head of End User Computing is talking about how Digital Workspaces look like it will make VDI viable again with even greater security and flexibility we've only seen in science fiction.
Edwin Yuen of the Enterprise Strategy Group talks about their research on hybrid cloud adoption and asks the question: "are we doing this right?"
Flowhub's Point-of-Sale has been carefully crafted for the cannabis industry and reports to CTS & METRC automatically, and was recently voted the best solution in the industry by the Laurel Awards. We also talk about dumb locks and freaking fast Wi-FI on the horizon.
Passwords aren't enough. We get to talk to the Google Counter Abuse team about passwords, multifactor authentication, and the future. Is ChromeOS the next enterprise OS, and why is it taking so long for everyone to go SSL?
Shotput is automating the small store supply chain with some very cool robots and a lot of smarts.
We talk to Savvius about the future of network monitoring and the type of data NetOps teams need today in order to succeed. Recognizing that NetFlow (which was introduced in 1997) no longer provides necessary network visibility, the company can discuss what teams need today for effective network monitoring, diagnostics and troubleshooting.
TWiET is chatting with Couchbase about the differences between traditional SQL databases and the emerging NoSQL databases and big data. Kevin Holder, the VP of Global Operations for Couchbase, is talking about just how their customers are migrating to non-traditional DB systems.
If you run any decently sized network, change management is like accounting, you just gotta do it or pay the price later. InfoBlox talks about NetMRI, their automated change management solution. Dave Signori of InfoBlox talks about "Network automation and why you really need to consider it as an integral part of your operations."
The reality is that network management and security have been merely creeping towards systems that definitively identify and solve problems rather than just telling you the symptoms. This is a deeper dive into ExtraHop's recently announced Addy service, and how machine learning for actively managing and securing systems may just be the answer.
Dana Simberkoff (Chief Risk, Privacy, and Information Security Officer of AvePoint) talks about the gender gap evidenced between Women in Technology versus Women in Privacy? Dana also talks about General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) from Europe and how it could apply to the US.
Equifax has become the American party joke and this TWiL+TWiET crossover episode will have the gang trying to imagine the technological and legal fixes for the credit industry in America. Aka "Piling onto Equifax". Should America have a cryptographic national ID?
Ray Pompon, Threat Research Evangelist at F5 Labs is back to take a deep dive on phishing attacks. How tactics are evolving, what attackers are after, how orgs need to protect themselves, etc.
Lubos Parobek, Sauce Labs' VP of products, can speak to how manual testers can adapt with the times to ensure automation doesn’t put them out of work, how developers can diversify their skills to straddle a mix of dev and troubleshooting, and why automated testing might be the hottest new job on the block.
We're talking about punishments for data security breaches, Amazon AR shopping, and Brian McHenry of F5 takes a deep dive into Single Sign On Technology through planning, implementation, and potential pit falls.
A veteran's day tribute, easier computer donations to schools and Michael Roy, Product Line Marketing Manager at VMware talking about Type II Hypervisors and the 10th anniversary of VMware Fusion.
From Data Analytics Specialist to IT Manager, it’s vital for IT Professionals to evolve with their company and not be left behind or become obsolete.
Firewalls as a Service: Although still in the early adoption stage, FWaaS also presents significant opportunities for greatly simplifying security deployment and management while reducing costs by eliminating on-premise hardware.
ScaleArc is talking about how active/active load balancing can help customers get to the cloud faster, save money, and increase application availability.
Fr. Robert Ballecer and Louis Maresca talk to Chris and...another Chris! The first guest, Christopher Mitchell, is the Director of the Community Broadband Networks Initiative with the Institute for Local Self-Reliance. He runs MuniNetworks.org as part of ILSR’s effort to ensure broadband networks are directly accountable to the communities that depend upon them. The second guest, Chris Corde, discusses VMware's AppDefense for protecting applications running in virtualized environments.
Fan-contributed topic on the technologies and strategies behind open source virtual hosting.
It's been an interesting year in Enterprise tech and we couldn't possibly fit ALL the best of TWiET in a single episode, but we've pulled together some of the stories that we think have long-lasting consequences for the Enterprise. From the START of the repeal of net neutrality, to ISPs behaving badly, the next generation of Data Center SSDs and an IoT solution that DOESN'T come with a "pwn me" sticker in the box. We've also got interviews explaining why supporting municipal networks might be your best option for solid broadband WITHOUT the politics, and why "Security Onion" isn't a suite, but a SURVIVAL tool for modern Enterprise.
Microservices. They have had a monumental impact on DevOps, allowing developers to speed up implementation and improve resiliency. However, through the implementation of microservices, developers now have larger and more complex workloads to handle.
The EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) replaces the Data Protection Directive 95/46/EC and was designed to harmonize data privacy laws across Europe, to protect and empower all EU citizens data privacy and to reshape the way organizations across the region approach data privacy.
The future of work: Will AI and analytics be key to killing Time Wasters? Plus, boosting productivity in the global workplace.
How we did on the 2017 predictions, and what our predictions are for 2018.
Everybody is unique and Spoon Guru is introducing an app to help match your shopping to anyone's dietary needs. Can an app help prevent reactions from food allergies and can technology be used for dietary restrictions for religion, allergies, or just losing weight? SpoonGuru is also a platform to help vendor integrate in dietary requirements to their sales platform.
Is it time to retire SATA? With the advent of ultra-high performance NAND Flash and zero-latency switching fabric, Serial ATA might be ready to go the way of IDE, MFM and RLL. Kingston drops by the studio to explain why the U.2 interface might be ready to take over in the Data Center.
Mass migration to the cloud has proven to be challenging, costly and complex for many companies. This is why on-prem footprints continue to maintain a stronghold on essential apps that aren't making the move. Edge computing has brought together the best of the cloud and made it more accessible to more workloads, previously locked on prem. Hybrid, multi-cloud and edge-based models will propel the cloud forward.
The Divi Project is working on an enterprise-grade cryptocurrency system to make M2M and B2B available outside the grey world of cryptocurrencies using the Etherium Blockchain. They originally took it from the word Divvy, which means “Divide up and Share.” It can also be an acronym for Decentralized Intuitive Value Initiative.
US companies need to be ready to be compliant come May 2018 because if they aren’t, revenue-based fines of up to 4% of total annual worldwide turnover can be expected. This regulation is incredibly far reaching and complex. Brett Hansen, Dell’s VP Vice President of Data Security Solutions, can highlight the key information that US CIOs and IT professionals need to know, some best practices he's seeing in the marketplace, and some of the biggest barriers to implementation leaders need to address.
Fr. Robert Ballecer, Brian Chee, and Curt Franklin talk to Heather Williams about WPA2 enhancements and its protocol successor WPA3. Meanwhile, the FBI seems to think they can wish for a magical solution to phone encryption. In other news, Intel launched Optane SSD 800P and Starsky Robotics unleashes a driverless truckload in Florida.
VMware Vice President Infrastructure Ivan Oprencak talks about where AWS came from and where it might be going as the world of cloud computing matures.
Datavisor's solution provides for unsupervised machine learning to help identify fraud, abuse, and money laundering in your systems without the need for human intervention.
Terry Myerson leaves Microsoft, more Linux distributions on Windows, the danger of Bad Bots, ICO is revealed to be fraudulent, SpaceX's plan to provide global satellite broadband services gets approval from the FCC, and more!
Panera baked up a hot batch of fail, Mira is banking, Century Link has NO customers, and Wilson Electronics stops by to explain the future of Wireless with 5G.
Fr. Robert Ballecer, Lou Maresca, and Curt Franklin talk to Chris Logan about VMware's involvement in the healthcare industry.
Onboarding new personnel is always a challenge, but when you add the vast differences between baby boomers and Gen-X, you have a training nightmare. MindTickle talks about applying the psychology of gaming to smooth the onboarding process.
VMware Workspace One: virtual desktop infrastructure changing its spots to become a bigger enterprise force. Big Data helps find a big killer, and North Korea ramps up on cyber warfare.
NetBeez talks about using low cost monitoring devices to measure performance from the end user perspective.
We talk to the VeloCloud Business Unit, at VMware about the future of Software Defined Wide Area Networks and how if will affect the hybrid cloud world.
Now that Dyn is part of Oracle, we talk to them about how advances are going to leverage the cloud to the edge.
A conversation about why things still aren't balanced for women in technology. Plus, LogicHub's Security Orchestration system.
Lava isn't covering all of Hawaii, autonomous trucks are probably going to beat cars to the market, and we talk to Alcatel-Lucent about their project to service millions of WiFi users in the NY Subway... and NO you shouldn't roast marshmallows over a lava flow.
Perimeter security is dead, but why are Web Applications Firewalls the new way to handle the world of microservices?
Digging deeper into the recent changes to the VMware Security model, what's changed now that microservices are taking over the world.
Did C-19 Change Cybersecurity?
How They Fit Into the Enterprise.
Who would have thought the pandemic would drive biometrics, cybersecurity in schools comes up short and we talk about how serverless can solve our DevSecOps problems.
What's up with 5G fees, Makers step up for first responders, how COVID-19 has changed IT
Russian hackers charged by U.S., Software Crowdtesting, IBM Cloud